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Lisa Stewart

Understanding Misunderstandings: How to do a rhetorical analysis | Trish Roberts-Miller - 0 views

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    a clearly written online textbook
Lisa Stewart

Chapter 1: Origin and Definition of Rhetoric - 3 views

  • “What makes rhetoric more than a base appeal to the emotions?”  Many have answered like Plato—“not much”; but those who delve a little further come to appreciate the important role of the human will in communications.  Every message from human to human is laden with the will (emotions or desires) of the speaker, and comes to a hearer who is full of his own emotions and predispositions.  This fact makes the study of how words are made persuasive both legitimate and necessary. 
Ryan Catalani

The Case for Cursive - NYTimes.com - 4 views

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    "Might people who write only by printing - in block letters, or perhaps with a sloppy, squiggly signature - be more at risk for forgery? Is the development of a fine motor skill thwarted by an aversion to cursive handwriting? And what happens when young people who are not familiar with cursive have to read historical documents like the Constitution?"
Lisa Stewart

American Rhetoric: Rhetorical Devices in Sound - 4 views

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    has specific examples of figures in sound and movie files--American examples from speeches, radio, ads, etc.
Steve Wagenseller

Klingon -- not just for Trekkies anymore - 1 views

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    As a speaker myself of a conlang, I am always impressed when other humans willfully become weirder than we already are -- even to learning a "non-Terran" (sort of) language. And its syntax is OVS, rare here on earth, but it does exist. As Hamlet said, "taH pagh, taHbe".
Ryan Catalani

A New Generation's Vanity, Heard Through Hit Lyrics - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    "Now, after a computer analysis of three decades of hit songs, Dr. DeWall and other psychologists report finding what they were looking for: a statistically significant trend toward narcissism and hostility in popular music. As they hypothesized, the words "I" and "me" appear more frequently along with anger-related words, while there's been a corresponding decline in "we" and "us" and the expression of positive emotions."
Steve Wagenseller

Is there a House in the Doctor? - 1 views

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    The New England Journal of Medicine has a first-person article about the consequences of the language of economics in the doctoring biz . From the article, "A decent medical-care system that helps all the people cannot be built without the language of equity and care. If this language is permitted to die and is completely replaced by the language of efficiency and cost control, all of us - including physicians - will lose something precious."
Ryan Catalani

Getting in the last word | StarTribune.com - 1 views

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    A U of M professor is trying to beat the clock to finish his masterwork: A dictionary of the origins of some of the most misunderstood words in English.... Liberman discovered that about 1,000 common English words -- mooch, nudge, man, girl, boy, frog, oat, witch and skedaddle among them -- seemed to be highly confused or all but untraceable, as if they magically appeared in English, pouf!
Steve Wagenseller

Klingon Language Institute - 2 views

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    If you've got a bit of phlegm in the throat, the Klingon alphabet is just the thing for clearing that out.
Lara Cowell

Save the Words Website - 8 views

http://www.savethewords.org A website where you can pledge to save endangered, yet worthy, words. Read the story at http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/11/09/131201940/save-the-words

language

started by Lara Cowell on 10 Nov 10 no follow-up yet
Lisa Stewart liked it
Ryan Catalani

NYT On Language: Chunking - 4 views

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    "In recent decades, the study of language acquisition and instruction has increasingly focused on "chunking": how children learn language not so much on a word-by-word basis but in larger "lexical chunks" or meaningful strings of words that are committed to memory ... A native speaker picks up thousands of chunks like "heavy rain" or "make yourself at home" in childhood, and psycholinguistic research suggests that these phrases are stored and processed in the brain as individual units."
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    Good find, Ryan! I also took the video link and embedded it into our moodle page.
Kathryn Murata

Born With The Perfect Pitch? - 8 views

  • If that's all we knew, we couldn't generalize any of the sounds we hear
  • tonotopic maps
Lisa Stewart

Disinterested or uninterested? How long we should cling to a word's original meaning. -... - 3 views

  • There is no exact synonym for (the old-fashioned) disinterested, for example. In such cases, keeping a "legacy" sense in circulation is laudable activism in pursuit of semantic sustainability—as if you found some members of a near-extinct species of mollusk and built a welcoming environment in which they could breed.
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    Semantic Sustainability
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    Here's a followup on the Economist's language blog: http://www.economist.com/blogs/johnson/2011/04/change . The comments are pretty interesting, too.
Ryan Catalani

Chomsky was wrong: evolutionary analysis shows languages obey few rules - 1 views

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    "The results are bad news for universalists: "most observed functional dependencies between traits are lineage-specific rather than universal tendencies," according to the authors. [...] If universal features can't account for what we observe, what can? Common descent. "Cultural evolution is the primary factor that determines linguistic structure, with the current state of a linguistic system shaping and constraining future states." It's important to emphasize that this study looked at a specific language feature (word order)."
Steve Wagenseller

Independent thinking -- corpus callosotomy video - 2 views

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    In the 1960s, Michael Gazzaniga with Roger Sperry & Joseph Bogen pioneered split brain research. This video shows how one patient's language centers for comprehension and speech are now distinct due to the cutting of his corpus callosum.
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    Wow! I think the students will find this fascinating.
Jade Hinsdale

Talk-Therapy is as effective as Medication in some cases of depression - 1 views

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    I saw this topic at one of ms. stewarts posts and the topic really interests me as someone that is really interested in biology and believes in the science of medicine. possible research topic.
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